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IN THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
AT THE PEACE PALACE
THE HAGUE, THE NETHERLANDS
THE ADVISORY OPINION CONCERNING
FUTURE GENERATIONS’ LEGAL INTERESTS IN RELATION TO THE CLIMATE CRISIS
MEMORIAL FOR THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES (OAS)
THE 2016 WORLD CONSERVATION CONGRESS MOOT COURT WORKSHOP
SEPTEMBER 2016
2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES…………………………………………………………………. 3
STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION..……………………………...………………………… 5
QUESTION PRESENTED..…………………………………………………………………. 6
STATEMENT OF FACTS.……………………………………………………...………….... 7
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENTS…………………………………………………………….. 8
ARGUMENT.……………………………………………………………………………........9
I. The responsibility of States under international law to address the global climate
crisis for the benefit of present and future generations of humankind…..………..…9
II. The States have the responsibility to attend to the global climate crisis under the
general principles and international instruments on human and environmental
rights..…………………………………………………….……………………….….13
A. Human Rights, the 1972 Stockholm Declaration, and the international right to
a clean environment ………………………………………………………....13
B. Intergenerational responsibility and public participation …………………..15
III. The American States are responsible to address the global climate crisis under the
Organization of American States legal instruments………………………………….19
A. The Resolutions of the Organization of American States Reinforce the
Commitment to Protect and Preserve the Environment……………………...19
B. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Recognizes the Connection
Beetween Human and Environmental Rights ………………………………..20
C. Structure of the Organization of American States ……………………….......22
D. Developed and Developing Countries Have Common but Differentiated
Responsibilities when Addressing Environmental Issues ……………………24
IV. Climate Change is a Tangible Reality in OAS State Parties, Reinforcing the
Organization's Commitment to Protect and Preserve the
Environment……………................................................................................................28
CONCLUSION..……………………………………………………………………………..30
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
Treaties and Conventions
Additional Protocol I of 1977 to the Geneva Conventions of 1949.
Convention on the Rights of the Child, (1989).
Paris Agreement (2015).
American Convention of Human Rights (1969).
UNCEC Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation and Access to Justice in Environmental
Matters (1998).
Additional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights in the Area of Economic. Social, and
Cultural Rights “Protocol of San Salvador” (1988).
Charter of the Organization of American States (1967).
Inter-American Specialized Conference on Human Rights, San José, Costa Rica, 22 November (1969).
The Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer (1987).
Declaration of Santa Cruz
U.N. Documents
Rio Declaration on Environment and Development (1992).
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966).
UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. General Comment No. 14 (11 August 2000).
Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972).
Proclamation of Teheran, Final Act of the International Conference on Human Rights (1968).
Sustainable Development Goals (2015).
Judicial and Arbitral Decisions
Trail smelter case (USA v. Canada), 1941.
Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons, Advisory Opinion, 1996 ICJ 241–42, para. 29 Pulp Mills on the river Uruguay (Argentina v. Uruguay), 2010. Yanomami v. Brazil, 1985.
4
Commission is the Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Ecuador, 1997.
Books, Treatises, Digests and Restatements
KISS, A. C., & SHELTON, D. (1991). Guide to International environmental law. Leiden, The Netherlands,
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.
SANDS, Phillippe. Principles of International Environmental Law. Second edition. Cambridge University
Press. (2003).
SEITENFUS, Ricardo. Manual das Organizações Internacionais, 4a ed. Porto Alegre: Editora Livraria
do Advogado, 2005.
MAZZUOLI, Valerio de Oliveira. Curso de Direito Internacional Público, 3a Ed. São Paulo: Editora
Revista dos Tribunais 2011.
GODINHO, Fabiana de Oliveira. Coleção Para Entender: A Proteção Internacional dos Direitos
Humanos. Belo Horizonte: Del Rey, 2006.
PEREZ, Franz. Human Rights and the Environment: Proceedings of a Geneva Environment Network
roundtable. “Key questions concerning the human rights and environment debate: An introduction.” July 2004.
Other
HOWARD, Brian Clark. “Bolivia's Second Largest Lake Has Dried Out. Can It Be Saved?”. Available in:
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/01/160121-lake-poopo-bolivia-dried-out-el-nino-climate-change-
water/>
World Meteorological Organization. “Global climate breaks new records January to June 2016.” Available at:
<http://public.wmo.int/en/media/press-release/global-climate-breaks-new-records-january-june-2016> National Snow & Ice Data Center. “The Arctic sets yet another record low maximum extent.” Available in:
<http://nsidc.org/news/newsroom/arctic-sets-yet-another-record-low-maximum-extent>
5
STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
On January 15, 2016 the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted Resolution
A/RES/70/xxx, which requests an advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice
(“the Court”) in accordance with Article 65 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice
(‘the Statute’). Pursuant to Article 66, paragraph 2, of the Statute, the Court decided that the
States entitled to appear before it and the United Nations were able to furnish information on
the question through regional intergovernmental organizations. Therefore, the Organization
of American States hereby submits its memorial on the question presented.
6
QUESTION PRESENTED
I. WHAT IS THE RESPONSIBILITY UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW OF
STATES TO ADDRESS THE GLOBAL CLIMATE CRISIS FOR THE BENEFIT OF
PRESENT AND FUTURE GENERATIONS OF HUMANKIND?
7
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Conscious that the development of International Environmental Law is of paramount
importance not only to the sustainable development but also to the poverty eradication and
social and economic equality, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) adopted in
September of 2015 the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) which establishes a plan of
action to the governments, the private sector and the civil society, in a collaborative
perspective, aiming to shift the world on to a sustainable and resilient path.
Recognizing that climate change represents a threat to the humankind, the Conference
of the Parties for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change adopted in
December of 2015 the Paris Agreement which aims to strengthen the global response to
climate change.
On the 19th of June of 2015, UNGA decided to develop an international legally
binding instrument under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
on the conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond
national jurisdiction. Thus, the 1st Session of the Preparatory Committee established by
UNGA Resolution 69/292 started discussions concerning the aforementioned instrument.
Considering the need to clarify the parameters of the responsibility under international
law of States to address the global climate crisis for the benefit of present and future
generations of humankind, the UNGA adopted the resolution A/RES/70/xxx requesting the
ICJ for an advisory opinion on this matter (“What is the responsibility under international
law of States to address the global climate crisis for the benefit of present and future
generations of humankind?”).
In accordance to Article 66, paragraph 2, of the Statute of the International Court of
Justice (ICJ), the ICJ decided to invoke its right to hear oral arguments, and invited all
interested State parties to submit written statements through regional intergovernmental
organizations as an efficient way to represent the multiplicity of State interests in the
proceedings.
The Organization of American States thus presents the memorial pursuant Article 49
of the ICJ Rules of Court.
8
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENTS
Primarily, the Organization of American States (OAS) corroborates that all States
must bear in mind their responsibility to protect the environment for future and present
generations of humankind, a principle backed by documents such as the United Nations
Convention on Law of the Sea, and the Rio and Stockholm declarations, among others.
Under general principles and international instruments on human and environmental
rights, the States have the responsibility concerning the environmental crisis and its effects on
future and present generations – a commitment that is backed by respecting of the rights of
children, and reinforced by the Paris Agreement, as well as within the framework of the 2030
Sustainable Development Goals.
The Pact of San José, just like the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, does not
contain references to environmental conservation, however, within the Inter-American
system the connection between human and environmental rights is also recognized, and so,
the OAS have the responsibility to act upon climate change issues, which is reflected on how
the organization’s resolutions reinforce this commitment, bearing in mind that developed and
developing countries have common but differentiated responsibilities when addressing the
matter, a principle rooted in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC).
Being affected by the impacts of climate change, the OAS has utmost interest to
partake in the efforts towards environmental conservation.
9
ARGUMENT
I. THE RESPONSIBILITY OF STATES UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW TO
ADDRESS THE GLOBAL CLIMATE CRISIS FOR THE BENEFIT OF PRESENT
AND FUTURE GENERATIONS OF HUMANKIND
State responsibility is a principle of paramount importance in International Law. It
establishes that when a State commits an internationally wrongful act that generates
consequences in another State the perpetrator State is accountable for its actions, as
international responsibility is established amongst them1. Those acts are normally derived
from breaches in customary international law or treaties.
In the field of international environmental law specific limitations in exploitative
activities that may cause harm to other States are sometimes unclear and subject to regional
practice. The Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, held
in Stockholm in 1972, provides in its Principle 21 that States do have the right to exploit their
resources and to establish their own environmental law, but have to assure that no damage is
caused to other States or to areas beyond national jurisdictions. This right, despite being
conceived as a soft-law instrument has been widely accepted by the international community,
thus becoming a norm of customary international environmental law. As writes Sands about
Principle 21 reaffirmed by Principle 2(a) of the Rio Declaration: “[...] a document adopted
by consensus by 176 states, arguably reflects an ‘instant’ change in the rule of customary
international law which is widely considered to be set forth in Principle 21”2. And the
Principle was later stated in an arbitral award in the Trail Smelter case between the United
States of America and Canada3, in 1941 and later recognized in Principle 21. Principle 21 is
reiterated by Principle 2 of the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development from 1992.
Recently, the International Court of Justice dealt with the matter of transboundary pollution
in the Pulp Mills on the River Uruguay case, between Argentina and Uruguay, in 20104, in
1 Report of the International Law Commission on the work of its fifty-third session. Draft articles on
Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts.(2008) 2 SANDS, Phillippe. Principles of International Environmental Law. Second edition. Cambridge University
Press. p. 54 3 Pulp Mills on the river Uruguay (Argentina v. Uruguay), 2010.
4 Trail smelter case (USA v. Canada), 1941.
10
which Argentina despite being unsuccessful in their claims, argued that the pulp mills
represented potential transboundary damage to argentinian territory.
Article 139 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
provides that States must ensure that activities are developed in conformity otherwise
entailing liability, those activities being carried out by the States themselves, enterprises or
natural or juridical persons that possess that State’s nationality or is controlled by their
nationals. Article 139 was recently cited by the Seabed Disputes Chamber of the International
Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, further elaborating on the responsibilities of sponsoring
States5. UNCLOS also provides in its article 235 that States are to be considered liable in
accordance with international law, being responsible for the fulfilment of their obligations
regarding the preservation and protection of the marine environment. The article seeks to
establish adequate compensation for damage caused by pollution of the marine environment.
Notably the Trail smelter case6, an arbitration settled in 1941 between Canada and the
United States of America, sets precedent towards the understanding that even if the activity
that causes damage is conducted by a private party a State will not be excused from its
obligations and responsibilities by allowing a private party to take control of said activity.
Therefore “due diligence” is a concept of extreme importance when considering the activities
of enterprises in relation to the countries from which these enterprises operate. As Kiss
writes:
The duty to avoid transfrontier pollution requires each state to
exercise “due diligence,” which means to act reasonably and in
good faith and to regulate public and private activities subject to its
jurisdiction or control that are potentially harmful to any part of the
environment. The principle does not impose an absolute duty to
prevent all harm, but rather requires each state to prohibit those
activities known to cause significant harm to the environment, such
as the dumping of toxic waste into an international lake, and to
mitigate harm from lawful activities that may harm the
environment, by imposing limits, for example, on the discharges of
pollutants into the atmosphere or shared watercourses. 7
5 SEABED DISPUTES CHAMBER OF THE INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNAL FOR THE LAW OF THE SEA.
Responsibilities and obligations of States sponsoring persons and entities with respect to activities in the Area.
Advisory Opinion (2011) 6 Trail smelter case (USA v. Canada), 1941
7 KISS, A. C., & SHELTON, D. (1991). Guide to International environmental law. Leiden, The Netherlands,
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.p. 91
11
It is therefore clear that compliance with international environmental law is a goal to
be pursued, since non-compliance bears great responsibility and risks to the State and also to
the international community. State responsibility can be applied to the enormous impact
caused by State’s industries that contribute to climate change. It is a danger to the whole
world and the same standards of liability should be held. Actions that contribute to climate
crisis or even lack of action towards preventing it represent a threat to the world and should,
therefore, be considered as part of the aforementioned Principles. It is also stated in the
Stockholm Declaration in its Principle 22 that States are to work in order to improve
international law aimed at compensating victims of environmental damage.
In the advisory opinion handed by the Court in 1996 by request of the General
Assembly of the United Nations about the Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons,
considerations were made concerning the safeguarding and protection of the environment and
the environment being seen as an element that should be taken into consideration regarding
the law applicable in armed conflict.
It was argued by some States that the use of nuclear weapons would be unlawful at
any time because the inherently harmful nature of the weapons would breach the norms
concerning environmental protection by itself. Namely, the Additional Protocol I of 1977 to
the Geneva Conventions of 1949, Article 35, paragraph 3, establishes the prohibition of
“methods or means of warfare which are intended, or may be expected, to cause widespread,
long-term and severe damage to the natural environment”.8 The Convention of 18 May 1977
on the Prohibition of Military Techniques or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental
Modification Techniques, Stockholm Declaration of 1972 and the Rio Declaration of 1992
were cited to the same effect, referencing transboundary damages and arguing that such
norms should apply in times of peace or war.
Even though the Court said the issue at stake was if there was an obligation of total
restraint during a military conflict and not if those treaties applied during armed conflict, the
Court recognized that indeed those obligations regarding the respect for the environment are
“now part of the corpus of international law relating to the environment”. The Court states
that whilst there is no specific prohibition for the use of nuclear weapons the environment
must always be taken into account when analyzing the norms applicable to armed conflict.
8 Additional Protocol I of 1977 to the Geneva Conventions of 1949, Article 35, paragraph 3.
12
Finally, taking cognizance of these developments, the International
Court of Justice recognized in an advisory opinion that “[t]he
existence of the general obligation of states to ensure that activities
within their jurisdiction and control respect the environment of
other states or of areas beyond national control is now part of the
corpus of international law relating to the environment.” 9
A nuclear weapon has specific characteristics that differ from any other weapon used
in warfare, due to its extreme nature and the well known long lasting consequences from
radiation, since it deeply harms ecosystems, food supplies and is able to cause genetic defects
in future generations. Its use cannot be overlooked. Taking the rights of the future generations
and the protection of the environment into account means to recognize that the use of nuclear
weapons poses a threat not only to the mankind but to the planet itself.
Therefore, all States must bear in mind their responsibility to protect the environment
for both the present and future generations, taking in consideration the International Court of
Justice opinion on the States' obligation to avoid any hazardous activity such as the use of
nuclear weapons.
9 Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons, Advisory Opinion, 1996 ICJ 241–42, para. 29
13
II. THE STATES HAVE THE RESPONSIBILITY TO ATTEND TO THE GLOBAL
CLIMATE CRISIS UNDER THE GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND INTERNATIONAL
INSTRUMENTS ON HUMAN AND ENVIRONMENTAL RIGHTS
A. HUMAN RIGHTS, THE 1972 STOCKHOLM DECLARATION, AND
THE INTERNATIONAL RIGHT TO A CLEAN ENVIRONMENT
It is of common knowledge that human rights have long been discussed and held as
one of the main interests of the international community, especially after the Second World
War. Being so, human rights have been progressing and expanding over the years. Certainly,
a dissonant circumstance is the case of environmental rights – that only in the recent 1960’s10
began to develop and consolidate – with a major turning point in 1972 with the United
Nations Conference on the Human Environment, held in Stockholm.
Having this timeline in mind, the vast majority of human rights treaties were written
before environmental rights and change became an international issue and focus point, and
so, it is understandable that the fundamental Universal Declaration of Human Rights does not
even mention the environment or climate change once. However, it was only natural to link
the two: environmental law is not only a new set of rights and obligations in itself, but also
part of the human rights system; the human right to a healthy environment.
For example, in 1966, the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural
Rights, in its Article 12, as one of the means to guarantee physical and mental health,
considers the improvement of the “environmental and industrial hygiene” to be necessary (12
(2)(b)).11
Regarding this matter, the Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, in
its General Comment no. 14,12
addressing the Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of
Health contained in Article 12, acknowledges that “the right to health embraces a wide range
of socio-economic factors that promote conditions in which people can lead a healthy life,
10
UNGA Resolution 2398 (XXIII Session) (1968). In this resolution, titled “Problems of the human
environment,” a concern “about the consequent effects on the condition of man, his physical, mental and social
well-being, his dignity and his enjoyment of basic human rights” was expressly demonstrated in regards to
environmental change. Also, in this resolution, the parties agreed that “increased attention to the problems of the
human environment is essential for sound economic and social development,” and determined that they were to
“to convene in 1972 a United Nations Conference on the Human Environment,” which resulted in the iconic
Stockholm Declaration. 11
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966). 12
Contained in Document E/C.12/2000/4
14
and extends to the underlying determinants of health, such as […] a healthy environment.”13
The Comment clearly associates human and environmental rights in co-dependency.
Such correlation can also be found in the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the
Child,14
in Article 24(c), connecting primary health care with the provision of clean drinking-
water and takes into consideration the risks and dangers of environmental pollution.15
However, the direct link between the environment and the right to life was made for
the first time during the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, in 1972,16
precisely in the preamble’s Paragraph 1 and Principle 1 of the Stockholm Declaration.17
During the drafting, more than a dozen countries proposed that the initial principle of
the convention should begin “with a general affirmation of every human being’s right to a
safe or wholesome environment, arguing that it was implicit in the right to an adequate
standard of living recognized in Art. 25 (1)”18
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
However, this was rejected and the final text adopted for Principle 1 was the one
submitted by a group of developing countries, with a different tone, securing not only the
right to an “environment of a quality that permits a life of dignity and well-being,” but also
including the determination that “colonial and other forms of oppression and foreign
domination stand condemned”19
– bringing about prominent human rights issues in 1972 such
as the aforementioned problem of colonialism, but also racial discrimination, and the
apartheid. Thus, this first principle upholds fundamental human rights such as liberty,
equality, and adequate conditions of life20
in the previously mentioned “environment of a
quality that permits a life of dignity and well-being.” Principle 1 is momentous in the sense
13
UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. General Comment No. 14 (11 August 2000). 14
General Assembly resolution 44/25 15
Convention on the Rights of the Child, in Article (1989). 16
PEREZ, Franz. Human Rights and the Environment: Proceedings of a Geneva Environment Network
roundtable. “Key questions concerning the human rights and environment debate: An introduction.” July 2004. 17
Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972). 18
SHELTON, Dinah. Stockholm Declaration (1972) and Rio Declaration (1992). Available in:
<http://opil.ouplaw.com/view/10.1093/law:epil/9780199231690/law-9780199231690-e1608>. 19
Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972). 20
KISS, A. C., & SHELTON, D. (1991). Guide to International environmental law. Leiden, The Netherlands,
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.p. 36.
15
that it was the first statement of the association between environmental conservation and
human rights, “a matter of considerable jurisprudence in the subsequent three decades.”21
Furthermore, Principle 2 asserts that the environment should be preserved for present
and future generations. In that sense, Principle 3 determines that the capacity for human
resources to renew themselves should be maintained and that the non-renewable ones should
be guarded against exhaustion.22
The Declaration’s Principles also address the need to
preserve wildlife and its habitat, and the cessation of the production of toxic wastes that
cannot be absorbed by nature, as well as the prevention of marine pollution.23
B. INTERGENERATIONAL RESPONSIBILITY AND PUBLIC
PARTICIPATION
In fact, the OAS would like to highlight the importance of the aforementioned
Principle 2 to the matter addressed in the present document. Said principle states that
mankind “bears a solemn responsibility to protect and improve the environment for present
and future generations” for basic human rights can only be fully experienced in an
“environment of a quality that permits a life of dignity and well-being,”24
an understanding
confirmed in the Preamble, in its Paragraph 1, which determines that “both aspects of man's
environment, the natural and the man-made, are essential to his well-being and to the
enjoyment of basic human rights the right to life itself.”25
Perhaps, more than directly linking environmental issues with human rights, the key
idea of this Principle has to do with the intergenerational responsibility to protect and
improve the environment. It is a responsibility of the peoples and governments of the world
(as pointed out by Paragraph 2), but bearing in mind that the consequences of any harm done
to the environment in the present will be suffered mainly in the future to come.
21
Op cit. 22
Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972). 23
SHELTON, Dinah. Stockholm Declaration (1972) and Rio Declaration (1992). Available in:
<http://opil.ouplaw.com/view/10.1093/law:epil/9780199231690/law-9780199231690-e1608>. 24
ISS, A. C., & SHELTON, D. (1991). Guide to International environmental law. Leiden, The Netherlands,
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.p. 32. 25
Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972).
16
This same idea is replicated in several other international instruments of human and
environmental soft-law, such as the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, the
Proclamation of Teheran, and also, from the Convention on the Rights of the Child, deriving
from the notion of Intergenerational Equity, a principle of international justice. As
rationalized by Professors Kiss and Shelton:
“(…) humans who are alive today have a special
obligation as custodians or trustees of the planet to maintain its
integrity to ensure the survival of the human species. Those living
have received a heritage from their forbearers in which they have
beneficial rights of use that are limited by the interests and needs of
future generations.”26
The Rio Declaration of 1992, in Principle 3, states that human development must
meet the environmental needs of the present without compromising future generations27
- a
commitment reiterated recently in the Paris Agreement.28
Moreover, the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, State Parties agree that a child’s education must be directed to develop a
respect to the natural environment.29
Such provisions clearly demonstrate the necessity and
intent of the international community to include and reach out to the successors of our global
natural environment to understand that it is their right and responsibility to protect it.
In fact, it is important to address Principle 3 of the Rio Declaration – the principle of
sustainable development. As explained by Sands:
The term ‘sustainable development’ is generally considered to have
been coined by the 1987 Brundtland Report, which defined it as
‘development that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own
needs’. It contains within it two concepts:
1. the concept of ‘needs’, in particular the essential needs of the
world’s poor, to which overriding priority should be given; and
26
KISS, A. C., & SHELTON, D. (1991). Guide to International environmental law. Leiden, The Netherlands,
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. 27
Rio Declaration on Environment and Development (1992). 28
Paris Agreement (2015). Preamble. 29
Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989). Article 29(e).
17
2. the idea of limitations imposed, by the state of technology and
social organisation, on the environment’s ability to meet
present and future needs.30
Bearing in mind the concern in balancing the needs of both generations - both present
and future - the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development was recently adopted. It contains
seven Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that are directly connected to environmental
protection and rights, namely: Clean Water and Sanitation; Affordable and Clean Energy;
Sustainable Cities and Communities; Responsible Consumption and Production; Climate
Action; (Protection and Conservation of) Life Below Water; (Protection and Conservation of)
Life on Land. Climate change was one of the core focuses of the SDGs, which encourage the
engagement of governments, the private sector, and civil society to fulfill them by 2030.31
These goals will undoubtedly protect the environment for generations to come if they
are indeed fulfilled. However, the path for States to achieve them passes directly through
solving current problems faced by would populations, i.e., the lack of clean supplies of water
and sanitation. The only way to secure that to future generations is to start by finding out
solutions towards the goals by guaranteeing that people's needs are gradually being met in the
present.
This responsibility to protect different generations brings about the notion of public
participation and how it becomes indispensable, so those affected can be heard on matters
that shape the environmental future, i.e., how the Teheran Proclamation recognizes that it “is
imperative that youth participate in shaping the future of mankind,”32
for instance. The World
Charter on Nature also openly denotes the right of access to information and to participate in
environmental decision-making, also guaranteed in the Rio Declaration, Principle 10.33
It is
only through information that present generations can engage in public participation, and it is
only through public participation that world generations can have a say in the kind of
environment they want to live in or inherit.
30
SANDS, Phillippe. Principles of International Environmental Law. Second edition. Cambridge University
Press. p. 384. 31
Sustainable Development Goals (2015). Available at:
<http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/>. 32
Proclamation of Teheran, Final Act of the International Conference on Human Rights (1968). 33
PEREZ, Franz. Human Rights and the Environment: Proceedings of a Geneva Environment Network
roundtable. “Key questions concerning the human rights and environment debate: An introduction.” July 2004.
18
The Aarhus Convention, although regional (Europe - UNCEC) is perhaps the most
across-the-board international agreement on public participation. It incorporates Principle 1
of the Stockholm Declaration, and the preamble declares that “every person has the right to
live in an environment adequate to his or her health and well-being, and the duty, both
individually and in association with others, to protect and improve the environment for the
benefit of present and future generations."34
Furthermore, that rights and responsibilities
depend on the access of citizens to information and participation in decision-making
processes, and access to justice,35
which is reinforced in Article 1 as the Convention’s
objective. It is crucial to note that Article 19 allows any other state to accede to the
Convention, as long as it is a UN member and has approval from the Meeting of the parties,
and so, it can be more than an example – States around the globe can accept its terms.36
34
UNCEC Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation and Access to Justice in Environmental
Matters (1998). 35
KISS, A. C., & SHELTON, D. (1991). Guide to International environmental law. Leiden, The Netherlands,
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.p. 104. 36
UNCEC Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation and Access to Justice in Environmental
Matters (1998).
19
III. THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES (OAS) HAS A
RESPONSIBILITY TO ADDRESS THE GLOBAL CLIMATE CRISIS UNDER THE
ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES LEGAL INSTRUMENTS
Just like the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the American Convention of
Human Rights, or Pact of San José, the foundational instrument for the OAS, does not
contain references to environmental conservation.
It does, however, contain several human rights that, as previously elucidated, do
maintain a relationship with environmental rights and protection, e.g. the right to life, found
in Article 4, and the right to humane treatment, found in Article 5(1) – in which the
Convention guarantees that “every person has the right to have his physical, mental, and
moral integrity respected.”37
Within the Inter-American system, one can also find an unequivocal provision
concerning the environment. Article 11 of the San Salvador Protocol establishes that “State
Parties shall promote the protection, preservation, and improvement of the environment.”38
However, the violation of Article 11 cannot be presented to the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, through the
system of individual petitions. Although Article 19(7) of the abovementioned Convention
allows the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to formulate observations and
recommendations concerning any of the economic, social and cultural rights established in
the Protocol, Article 19(6) only allows cases regarding education and union rights to be
admitted to the Court and Commission via individual petitions.39
A. THE RESOLUTIONS OF THE ORGANIZATION OF THE
AMERICAN STATES REINFORCE THE COMMITMENT TO PROTECT
AND PRESERVE THE ENVIRONMENT
37
American Convention of Human Rights (1969). 38
Additional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights in the Area of Economic. Social, and
Cultural Rights “Protocol of San Salvador” (1988). 39
American Convention of Human Rights (1969).
20
Mindful that economic and social development as well as environmental protection
are included in the OAS main pillars of human rights and development, and bearing in mind
that climate change poses a serious threat to both of them, the OAS adopted a series of
Resolutions which demonstrates the OAS commitment to mitigate the negative impacts of
climate change especially the socio-economic and environmental consequences on the
countries of the Hemisphere and the world, for instance, Resolution AG/RES. 1674 (XXIX-
O/99) “Climate Change in the Americas", Resolution AG/RES. 1682 (XXIX-O/99), “OAS
Natural Disaster Reduction and Response Mechanisms,”, Resolution AG/RES. 1736 (XXX-
O/00), “The Socioeconomic and Environmental Impacts of Climate Change on the Countries
of the Hemisphere”, Resolution AG/RES. 1821 (XXXI-O/01), “The Socioeconomic and
Environmental Impacts of Climate Change on the Countries of the Hemisphere,” resolutions
AG/RES. 1819 (XXXI-O/01), “Human Rights and the Environment,” and AG/RES. 1896
(XXXII-O/02) and AG/RES. 1926 (XXXIII-O/03), “Human Rights and the Environment in
the America".
Resolution 2429 on Human Rights and Climate Change in the Americas, adopted on
June 3, 2008, firstly reaffirmed the commitment of all the OAS State-parties to all of the
instruments concerning human rights, sustainable development and climate change in the
framework of the OAS and eventually stimulated the coordination among the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), the General Secretariat of the OAS and both the
United Nations Human Rights Council and the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, in consultation with the member states, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and civil society organizations in order
to determine the possible existence of a link between adverse effects of climate change and
the full enjoyment of human rights.
The OAS understands that coordination among States and institutions is a
indispensable mean to face climate change, and that climate change is potentially harmful to
the enjoyment of human rights in a global scale.
B. THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
RECOGNIZES THE CONNECTION BETWEEN HUMAN AND
ENVIRONMENTAL RIGHTS
21
Despite the restraint imposed by Article 19 of American Convention of Human
Rights, the Commission has positioned itself against violations, in conformity with the
resolutions, and the documents produced by it illustrate how the OAS system is engaged in
protecting environmental rights and following the trend to link them to human rights.
In Yanomami v. Brazil,40
in response to a petition made on behalf of the
Yanomami indians, the Inter-American Commission recognized the connection between
environmental quality and the right to life.41
The petition alleged that the government violated the American
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man by constructing a
highway through Yanomami territory and authorizing exploitation
of the territory’s resources. These actions had generated the influx
of non-indigenous peoples who brought contagious diseases that
remained untreated due to lack of medical care. The Commission
found that the government had violated the Yanomami rights to
life, liberty, and personal security guaranteed by Art. 1 of the
Declaration, as well as the right of residence and movement (Art.
VIII), and the right to the preservation of health and well-being
(Art. XI).42
The Commission also acts by elaborating reports and trying to solve conflicts
before they are recommended to the Inter-American Court, such as the Yakye-Axa v.
Paraguay case43
and Sawhoyamaxa v. Paraguay.
A noteworthy document by the Commission is the Report on the Situation of
Human Rights in Ecuador. In it, a relationship between a healthy environment and the
American Convention on Human Rights, as stated:
The realization of the right to life, and to physical security and
integrity is necessarily related to and in some ways dependent upon
one's physical environment. Accordingly, where environmental
contamination and degradation pose a persistent threat to human
life and health, the foregoing rights are implicated.44
40
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Resolution Nº 12/85. Case Nº 7615. Yanomami v. Brazil
(1985). 41
KISS, A. C., & SHELTON, D. (1991). Guide to International environmental law. Leiden, The Netherlands,
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.p. 239. 42
Op cit. 43
The case ultimately ended up going to the Court after Paraguay’s response to the Commission’s
recommendations. 44
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Ecuador. Chapter
VIII(2) (1997).
22
By doing so, the Commission linked these rights to Article 1(1) of the American
Convention on Human Rights, creating a certain degree of enforceability to the right to a
healthy environment, when associating it with an obligation pertinent to rights contained in
the American Convention.
Therefore, although the right to respond to violations is somewhat restrained when it
comes to the litigative function, conversely, there is no limitation to the interpretative
function of the institutions, that cannot shy away from any treaty abuses, if requested. So,
there is an effort and will to react to violations, even within the legal limitations imposed by
the Convention.
It is important to point out that if environmental rights are indeed considered a human
right, as extensively demonstrated throughout this memorial, then a violation could be
submitted to the Court, but then as a transgression of the American Declaration of Human
Rights, in the form of its Article 63(1). Hence, an understanding of the structure of the
Organization of the American States is imperative.
C. STRUCTURE OF THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN
STATES
The Organization of American States (OAS) is considered the oldest regional
organism in the world, its origins date back to the First International Conference of American
States, held in Washington D.C, in 1890. The Conference resulted in the creation of the
International Union of American Republics, starting what was later known as the “inter
American system”, the oldest international institutional system.45
After the First International Conference of American States, numerous other
conferences were held until the creation of the OAS. 46
Then after World War II, the Ninth
Conference was held in Bogotá in 1948, where the Charter of the Organization of American
States was signed, officially creating the OAS.47
45
Organization of American States. Who We Are. Available at: <http://www.oas.org/en/about/who_we_are.asp. 46
MAZZUOLI, Valerio de Oliveira. Curso de Direito Internacional Público, 3ª Ed. São Paulo: Editora
Revista dos Tribunais 2011, p. 651. 47
OAS Member States: Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Barbados, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala,
Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint
23
The Charter of the Organization of American States came into effect on December 13,
1951 and it has been amended in four different occasions. The first amendment was the
Protocol of Buenos Aires (1967), the second was the Protocol of Cartagena (1985), the third
was the Protocol of Washington (1992) and, finally, the fourth was the Protocol of Managua
(1993).
As of today, the 35 independent States of the Americas have ratified the OAS
Charter48
being the main international organization in the Americas and one of the most
important in the world. The OAS’ main pillars are democracy, human rights, security, and
development.49
The Organization of American State’s structure is composed by the General
Assembly, the Meeting of Consultation of Ministers of Foreign Affairs, the Councils, the
Inter-American Juridical Committee, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the
General Secretariat, the specialized conferences and the specialized organizations.
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights is an autonomous organ of the
OAS whose main goal is to promote and protect human rights, also serving as a consultative
organ of the Organization in the matter of human rights.50
Together with the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights it is competent on matters of human rights, not only those present in
the American Convention on Human Rights51
but also in all of the inter-american treaties
concerning human rights.
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights holds a consultative competence,
interpreting the norms brought by the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights or any
other inter-american treaty concerning human rights, and it also holds competence on
Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, The Bahamas, Trinidad and Tobago, United States of
America, Uruguay and Venezuela. Available at: <http://www.oas.org/en/member_states. 48
On June 3, 2009, the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Americas adopted resolution AG/RES. 2438
(XXXIC-O/09), that resolves that the 1962 resolution, which excluded the Government of Cuba from its
participation in the inter-American system, ceases to have effect in the Organization of American States (OAS).
The 2009 resolution states that the participation of the Republic of Cuba in the OAS will be the result of a
process of dialogue initiated at the request of the Government of Cuba, and in accordance with the practices,
purposes, and principles of the OAS. 49
Organization of American States. Whate we Do. Available at:
<http://www.oas.org/en/about/what_we_do.asp. 50
Charter of the Organization of American States. Chapter XV. Article 106. 51
Inter-American Specialized Conference on Human Rights, San José, Costa Rica, 22 November 1969.
24
contentious cases, acting when treaties are violated by a member State that recognizes the
Court’s competence (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico and others).52
Regarding the contentious cases, only member States and the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights can make submissions to the Court.53
Differently, the
Commission admits that citizens can access the system directly, the same understanding used
by the European system of human rights, applying the jus standi54
principle. The Court is an
organ of the OAS, but an autonomous one; an important organ of the inter-american system
for the protection of human rights.
Therefore it is important to clarify that OAS' interest in climate change and the
environment is not diminished in any way. We seek to demonstrate our concern with
environmental matters and our efforts in maintaining the Americas in a constant search for
sustainable development.
D. DEVELOPED AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES HAVE
COMMON BUT DIFFERENTIATED RESPONSIBILITIES WHEN
ADDRESSING CLIMATE CHANGE
The concept of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities and Respective
Capabilities was first established as a principle in the 1992 United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), in its Preamble, and Articles 3(1) and 4(1).55
It
was then formulated as Principle 7 of the Rio Declaration – also in 1992. As Sands writes:
The principle of common but differentiated responsibility has
developed from the application of equity in general international
law, and the recognition that the special needs of developing
countries must be taken into account in the development,
application and interpretation of rules of international
environmental law.56
52
MAZZUOLI, Valerio de Oliveira. Curso de Direito Internacional Público, 3ª Ed. São Paulo: Editora
Revista dos Tribunais 2011, p. 890. 53
Article 61.1. American Convention on Human Rights (1969). 54
GODINHO, Fabiana de Oliveira. Coleção Para Entender: A Proteção Internacional dos Direitos
Humanos. Belo Horizonte: Del Rey, 2006, p. 109 55
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (1992). 56
SANDS, Philippe. Principles of International Environmental Law. Second edition. Cambridge University
Press. p. 385.
25
Therefore, the abovementioned Principle 7 of the Rio Declaration recognizes the
importance of state cooperation and global partnership in order to protect and restore the
environment, but it does, however, bring about the notion previously contained in the
UNFCCC (1992), stating that “developed countries acknowledge the responsibility that they
bear in the international pursuit of sustainable development in view of the pressures their
societies place on the global environment and of the technologies and financial resources they
command.”57
This is also replicated in Principle 12 of the Declaration of the United Nations
Conference on the Human Environment, considering that the resources made available to
preserve and improve the environment should take into account the circumstances and
particular requirements of developing countries, as well as in the Kyoto Protocol, Article 10.
Additionally, Montreal Protocol’s Article 5 also differentiates the responsibilities of states to
take measures against the depletion of the Ozone layer, giving special situation to developing
countries.58
Despite the fact that the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities was a
a point of contention during the negotiations of the 2015 Paris Agreement, which aims to
reduce annual emissions of greenhouse gases by 2020, it was also contemplated in Article 4:
3. Each Party’s successive nationally determined contribution will
represent a progression beyond the Party’s then current nationally
determined contribution and reflect its highest possible ambition,
reflecting its common but differentiated responsibilities and
respective capabilities, in the light of different national
circumstances. 4. Developed country Parties should continue taking
the lead by undertaking economy-wide absolute emission reduction
targets. Developing country Parties should continue enhancing their
mitigation efforts, and are encouraged to move over time towards
economy-wide emission reduction or limitation targets in the light
of different national circumstances.
This principle is built on two basic assumptions. Firstly, it acknowledges the
environment as a common heritage of humankind, which leads to the conclusion that all the
States bear the responsibility of protecting and preserving it. And secondly, that there are
some countries that have used up a greater amount of resources in the course of its own
development process and thus, bear greater responsibility towards the restoration of damages
historically caused to the environment. This conception is corroborated by Phillip Sands, who
also recognizes:
57
Rio Declaration on Environment and Development (1992). 58
The Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer (1987).
26
the need to take account of differing circumstances, particularly in
relation to each state’s contribution to the creation of a particular
environmental problem and its ability to prevent, reduce and
control the threat. (SANDS, p. 286)
Since climate change is acknowledged by the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change as common concern of humankind, the principle of common but
differentiated responsibilities applies thoroughly to this matter. Hence, the Court is called to
differentiate each country's obligations according to its usage of shared natural resources and
its ability to respond to environmental problems.
Considering that the OAS is mainly composed of developing States, yet also includes
developed ones, the Court is called to weigh each States’ ability to contribute to the
environment while determining their responsibilities. However, the OAS makes an appeal to
this Court to take this decision bearing in mind not only the aforementioned treaties, but also
the various contexts in which countries might be categorized in, taking into account their
level of development, in order to fairly determine the duties of each country.
Aware that this principle can be inconclusive in regarding the criteria that should be
adopted by the Court in determining each country's duties, we would like to recall the 1974
Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States in order to clarify this issue. The Charter
provides in Article 30 that:
“(...)All States shall endeavour to establish their own environment
and development policies in conformity with such responsibility.
The environmental policies of all States should enhance and not
adversely affect the present and future development potential of
developing countries.”
Therefore, the Court should take into consideration the developing countries special
circumstances and should evaluate the social cost of the duties posed on them, so that binding
environmental policies do not deepen their social vulnerability instead. The Court should take
account of each country economic capability, its historical contribution to environmental
problems and its need of economic development.
Hence, the ICJ can establish specific commitments for developed states, by setting a
range of different targets to be fulfilled by each state or even by granting developing states
27
with a longer fulfillment time frame, as for instance, was done in the Montreal Protocol,
Article 5 (1):
Article 5: Special situation of developing countries.1. Any Party
that is a developing country and whose annual calculated level of
consumption of the controlled substances in Annex A is less than
0.3 kilograms per capita on the date of the entry into force of the
Protocol for it, or any time thereafter until 1 January 1999, shall, in
order to meet its basic domestic needs, be entitled to delay for ten
years its compliance with the control measures set out in Articles
2A to 2E, provided that any further amendments to the adjustments
or Amendment adopted at the Second Meeting of the Parties in
London, 29 June 1990, shall apply to the Parties operating under
this paragraph after the review provided for in paragraph 8 of this
Article has taken place and shall be based on the conclusions of
that review.
Or else, the ICJ could follow the pioneering instrument of climate financing
contemplated in the 2015 Paris Agreement. Through this system, developed countries
transfer financial resources to developing countries in order to assist them in the stablishing
of policies that aim to avoid adverse impacts of climate change and to foster climate
resilience and low greenhouse gas emissions development. According to Professor Christina
Voigt and Felipe Ferreira:
(...) this represents a considerable change to previous practice
under the Convention, where developing countries simply had no
formal role in climate finance or in supporting other countries or in
being recognized for doing so. (VOIGT; FERREIRA, 2016, p. 70)
(...) Differentiation under the Paris Agreement has the potential to
function as a catalyst for a race to the top on climate action, rather
than merely a burden-sharing concept. (VOIGT; FERREIRA,
2016, p. 74)
A group of scholars and experts on international law released on March 30, 2015, a set
of Principles named the Oslo Principles on Global Climate Change Obligations59
in which
they work towards the goal of establishing clear criteria for States in order to face the threat
of the climate crisis. These Principles follow the aforementioned concept of common but
differentiated responsibilities by stating that least developed countries do not have the legal
obligation to lower their greenhouse gas emissions at their own expense. The innovative
approach taken by the Oslo Principles in dealing with the climate crisis creates a path to be
followed by future legal experts, States, and enterprises, for the basic means to accomplish
the obligations related to greenhouse gas emissions are set.
59
Oslo Principles on Global Climate Change Obligations. King’s College London. (2015)
28
Therefore, the ICJ should engage with the aforementioned instruments in order to
implement the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities.
IV. CLIMATE CHANGE EFFECTS IN OAS STATE PARTIES REINFORCE THE
ORGANIZATION'S COMMITMENT TO PROTECT AND PRESERVE THE
ENVIRONMENT
Numerous reasons surface when the question “Why should we act?” is asked. The
climate crisis represents a major threat to humankind, the slightest increase in global average
temperatures is capable of causing huge effects on the planet. From COP21, in Paris, came
the promise to guarantee that the world’s average temperature would not rise more than
1,5ºC, considering pre-industrial levels. This commitment is to be pursued by lowering the
level of greenhouse gas emissions substantially, and the Paris Agreement recognizes the need
for urgency in acting towards that goal. The climate crisis, despite being constantly
downplayed, has been showing growing and undeniable effects. Reports show that 2016 is set
to be the hottest year on record60
, demonstrating that we have already reached a temperature
1,3ºC warmer than pre-industrial levels, making the goal to keep it at 1,5ºC even more
daunting.
The actual consequences of warmer temperatures are being felt around the world and
through different ways. In the Arctic, the levels of sea ice have been decreasing, reaching
14.52 million square kilometers, that number being 1.12 million square kilometers smaller
than the average from 1981 to 201061
. The ice is expected to grow during wintertime but it
has been increasing less from year to year, making it impossible to keep a sustainable yearly
growth rate. Besides the Arctic, problems are happening in warmer climates also, unforeseen
bleaching events are ravaging coral reefs in the Pacific, the Caribbean, and in other parts of
the world. These bleaching events happen when temperatures in the ocean are warmer than
usual, the reefs are able to recover but when the events take place too often it makes damages
irreversible.
60
World Meteorological Organization. “Global climate breaks new records January to June 2016.” Available at:
<http://public.wmo.int/en/media/press-release/global-climate-breaks-new-records-january-june-2016> 61
National Snow & Ice Data Center. “The Arctic sets yet another record low maximum extent.” Available in:
<http://nsidc.org/news/newsroom/arctic-sets-yet-another-record-low-maximum-extent>
29
Some OAS member-states are especially affected by these impacts on the global
environment, a condition that is even recognized in the Santa Cruz Declaration, e.g., the
preambular Paragraph 3, which recognizes the vulnerability of Small Island developing states
in the hemisphere,62
making the SDG regarding the protection of the marine environment
particularly important to these States.
Negligence and environmental violations have been addressed in the Inter-American
system’s resolutions and reports, as previously demonstrated, and were not condoned –
rather, these behaviors were condemned.
The Poopo Lake was the second largest lake in Bolivia. Throughout the last thirty
years the Poopo Lake has shrunk to two percent of its size. According to the Bolivian
government, the exacerbation of El Niño's effects due to climate change is to blame.
However, scientists agree that the misuse of the lakes water supply and the inadequacy of the
state to take action by managing the waste are partially responsible.63
Condemning or trying to figure out solutions to State-members’ environmental issues are
not OAS’ only concern. As shown in Paragraph 15 of the Santa Cruz Declaration, OAS is
taking action to acknowledge all environmental affairs, while also including indigenous
peoples in the dialogue to reach a better understanding and consensus to solve the challenge
at hand, demonstrating a clear engagement to public participation.64
Climate change can be felt in various OAS state members, its impact presents itself in
countless different ways, and hence, the Organization has an unquestionable interest and
willingness to protect the environment, and to submit the present advisory opinion.
62
Declaration of Santa Cruz (2006). 63
HOWARD, Brian Clark. “Bolivia's Second Largest Lake Has Dried Out. Can It Be Saved?”. Available in:
<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/01/160121-lake-poopo-bolivia-dried-out-el-nino-climate-change-
water/> 64
Op Cit.
30
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Organization of American States respectfully requests that this
Honorable Court accepts these considerations as it was previously requested, and takes into
account that:
1. States have the responsibility to protect the environment for both the present and
future generations according to the international instruments of international law,
therefore, the principles contained in the instruments constituting the international
system of Environmental Law should be applied in relation to the global response to
climate change.
2. State parties of the Organization of American States have the responsibility to address
the global climate crisis for the benefit of present and future generations under OAS
legal instruments and principles, especially bearing in mind the principle of common
but differentiated responsibilities, since most members are developing countries
highly vulnerable to environmental impacts.
Respectfully Submitted
Agents for the Organization of American States
Recommended